23 research outputs found
Integrating climate security into policy frameworks: Jordan
The climate crisis is increasing security risks in Jordan. Of the manifold risks Jordan must contend with, most pressing are those with direct implications for water resources which are already under significant strain due to both climatic and human-induced factors. Higher temperatures are leading to more evapotranspiration and reduced rainfall are especially critical, straining the groundwater and aquifer reserves that are already over exploited. Extreme weather events and their impacts, including droughts, flash floods, and landslides, further complicate matters. These risks translate into important implications for Jordanians across a variety of areas, including political, social, demographic and economic realms, especially when combined with pre-existing grievances and especially poverty. This roadmap outlines a set of specific mechanisms and opportunities for the integration of climate, peace, and security considerations into policy and legislative frameworks in Jordan
Climate, peace and security programming in the Arab States: Considerations for integrated programming in Jordan, Yemen, Iraq and Somalia
The link between climate change and peace and security is becoming increasingly evident as the world grapples with the consequences of a warming planet. Climate change exacerbates existing inequalities and conflicts, and acts as a catalyst for new ones, as competition for dwindling resources, such as water and land intensify. Rising sea levels and extreme weather events displace communities, straining host communities’ resources, leading to potential social unrest. Additionally, climate-induced food and water scarcity can speak conflict over access to these essential resources. Furthermore, climate change can amplify existing social and economic inequalities, which can contribute to instability and unrest. Understanding the climate, peace, and security linkages, and developing integrated policies and programmes across this nexus, is critical to ensuring global peace and security, and addressing humanitarian needs while supporting sustainable development. This brief - based on the outcomes of a stakeholder workshop held in Cairo in March 2023 - outlines several best practices and lessons learned for the design, implementation, and evaluation of integrated programming that builds resilience to both climate change and security risks
Offering Engineering Students Global Perspective Through Experiential Learning Project in Wind Energy and Sustainability
Students from Princeton University partnered with students from the American University in Cairo in a three-week intensive hands-on field experience in Egypt. The project was to assemble, install, and test a wind mill-driven pump used for irrigation and to survey communities across Egypt in the Delta and Red Sea coast to assess water needs in these communities. The course offered a perspective on sustainable development in Egypt followed by water and energy resource challenges in Egypt\u27s diverse geographic areas. Students assembled a wind pump and installed it at the American University in Cairo for testing prior to installation at El Heiz, a desert oasis community in the Western Desert. The students were selected from diverse backgrounds in Mechanical and Aerospace Engineering, Civil and Environmental Engineering, Computer Engineering, and Operations Research and Financial Engineering, and learned the value of having diverse teams address engineering problems in a truly global context. This paper presents the case study including lessons learned in implementation of this experiential learning field project
The lives of women in a land reclamation project: Gender, class, culture and place in Egyptian land and water management
This article links feminist political ecology with the academic debate about commoning by focusing on the gendered distribution of common pool resources, in particular land and water. The research is set in the context of a coastal land reclamation project in Egypt’s Nile Delta, in a region where conflicts over resources such as arable land and fresh water are intensifying. Drawing on recent literature on commoning, we analyse the conditions under which different groups of resource users are constrained or enabled to act together. The article presents three case studies of women who represent different groups using land and water resources along the same irrigation canal. Through the concepts of intersectionality, performativity, and gendered subjectivity, this article explores how these women negotiate access to land and water resources to sustain viable livelihoods. The case studies unpack how the intersection of gender, class, culture, and place produces gendered subject positions in everyday resource access, and how this intersectionality either facilitates or constrains commoning. We argue that commoning practices are culturally and spatially specific and shaped by pre-existing resource access. Such access is often unequally structured along categories of class and gender in land reclamation and irrigation projects
Envisioning a future for young Balinese : the move towards sustainability in secondary education
Sustainability has become a debate of international significance; it addresses how human
development clashes with the finality of many resources on this planet and may threaten the
well-being of future generations and ecosystems. The debate thus touches on the question
of how humans interact with their environment - a prime concern of the discipline of
geography.
Behaving in line with sustainability involves changes in human self-conduct. Such change
seems to require at least some awareness of and education about development and
environmental processes. In fact, the importance of integrating sustainability in the domain
of education has become a prominent one. Young people are often described as key players
in implementing sustainability. Thus, international sustainability strategies view educating
children and teenagers about sustainability as a prerequisite for future sustainable
behaviour.
In 2005 the United Nations [UN] Decade of Education for Sustainable Development
commenced. In this context, scholars and educators discuss how to educate about
sustainability. The UN suggests conveying an image of 'global cooperation' toward
sustainable development in education whilst ensuring 'local relevance'. Yet, what ' local
relevance' means and how it can be attained remains unclear. I argue that in efforts to
implement sustainability education, both local debates of sustainability and local contexts
of education should be examined. Otherwise, international sustainability education efforts
may universalise ideas that are superficially portrayed as 'global' but that neglect local
particularities.
I take up the issue of sustainability education in Bali. On the Indonesian island, debates
have emerged that propose ways to move forward amidst increasing environmental
destruction and pollution as well as political and cultural change. These discussions sketch a 'Balinese way' of developing sustainably. I focus on how knowledge and debates
around sustainability are engaged in secondary education in Bali's capital city Denpasar.
Informed by poststructural theory, my thesis is that in order to locally implement
sustainability in education, processes and institutional arrangements of power, governing,
discourse and knowledge need to be assessed. Sustainability education is portrayed as a
' global cause', but it is the institutions and discourses articulated in local places that shape
how sustainability can be implemented locally. In Bali, sustainability meets an educational
climate shaped by curricular and political change nationally, regionally and locally. How
sustainability is being integrated in this environment is one subject of this research. I
examine how high school students in Bali learn about environment and sustainability. How
is sustainability framed in Balinese teaching practice? How is sustainability knowledge
engaged in teaching and learning at high schools in Denpasar? The research explores the
roles created for students in sustainability education and the practices of self conduct these
roles effect.
Rather than providing a manual for implementing sustainability education, this work
focuses on the conceptual issues around the project of marrying sustainability and
education. I show that sustainable development cannot be treated as a neutral policy
framework that is easily integrated into existing educational systems around the globe. My
argument draws on theoretical discussions around discourse, power, govemmentality and
subjectivity. I contend that sustainability and education operate as discourses that generate
power in multiple ways. Both operate as governmentalities that employ different types of
subjectivation. As sustainability 'meets' education, this involves the combination of two
separate discursive and institutional contexts. How they 'fit together' depends on how both
sustainability and education are institutionalised in local contexts. I also draw on theoretical
debates in environmental education, participation, and action research. I discuss how
geographical action research can be employed to research and foster discourse formation,
and to explain and create subject positions in sustainability education.
Empirically, I engaged an action research methodology. If young people are key
stakeholders in sustainability, then it is critical that they take an active stance in the very
debate of sustainability. This is not always the case in sustainability education. During nine
months of fieldwork, I researched Balinese debates around sustainability, and Balinese
approaches to sustainability education at secondary schools. Additionally, I conducted an
interactive workshop program with several groups of high school students in Denpasar and
Sanur. In these workshops, I experimented with educational practices to involve students in
the formation of youth-based sustainability knowledges and debates. I researched what
knowledges, themes, ideas and languages of sustainability, future and environment
emerged in the interactive teaching approach of my action research. I was particularly
interested how far a participatory research project in sustainability education would evoke
agency among students to act towards more sustainable futures and would open spaces for
new languages, roles and practices.
Based on my research experience, I argue that understanding how discourse and power
operate around sustainability education in place is instrumental to addressing sustainability
in 'locally relevant' ways
In pursuit of sustainability? Challenges for deliberative democracy in a Tasmanian local government
Sustainability may be viewed as a principled form of conduct. Among its effects is a growing emphasis on civil society and local governance through which the members of communities are encouraged to rethink democratic ideas and practices, and reconfigure how to live. Although normative, sustainability cannot properly be conceived as prescriptive; such a characteristic would undermine central elements of it, such as participation and equity. In this sense, requiring both mechanisms for community participation in decisionmaking and planning, and an ethic of engagement based on trust, reciprocity, and an acceptance of the rights of noncitizens and nonhuman nature, sustainability might also be construed as a deliberative form of democratic governance. Perhaps problematically, in the last decade this governmental aspect of sustainability has come to be associated with the procedures of communicative rationality. Supported by research conducted over three years in a local government in Tasmania, Australia, we argue that a deliberative and democratic praxis of sustainability may be effective only if and when underpinned by substantive changes to the exercise of power and leadership, and to the ways in which deliberative decisionmaking and planning are pursued. Communicative rationality alone is unlikely to achieve these ends.
Offering Engineering Students Global Perspective Through Experiential Learning Project in Wind Energy and Sustainability
[abstract not available]https://fount.aucegypt.edu/faculty_book_chapters/1217/thumbnail.jp
Solar-powered drinking water purification in the oases of Egypt\u27s Western Desert
© The Authors. Published by SPIE under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 Unported License. We focus on the potential of using solar PV powered, decentralized drinking water treatment technologies for providing communities in remote areas with safe drinking water. Small-scale, solar PV-powered solutions for water purification may help achieve the sustainable development goals in areas without electricity access. However, more field-based research on the performance of solar-powered drinking water technologies is needed in order to perfect existing technologies. We introduce the first longer-term applied field study on the performance of 16 solar PV-powered drinking water stations using greensand filters for iron removal and anodic oxidation for chlorine production in the oases across Egypt\u27s Western Desert. Local groundwater shows natural iron concentrations that in some places exceed the WHO standard (0.3 mg/l) by a factor of 50. The presented results show that the energy efficient, solar PV-operated stations successfully remove the iron from the water. Chlorine levels vary by location and are connected to local consumption patterns and site-specific system settings. Simple adjustments are needed in order to fully benefit from the solar-driven anodic oxidation process. Solar-powered technologies for drinking water purification need to be able to respond to specific local conditions in order to become an upscalable solution for remote, rural areas across the globe